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It would be difficult to make California’s controversial domestic violence
policies more irrational and unfair to men, but Senator Sheila Kuehl (D--Santa
Monica) is trying. California law has long excluded men and their children from
receiving state-funded DV services, even though research demonstrates that a
third of domestic violence-related injuries are incurred by heterosexual males.
The legislature reiterated this exclusion last fall by passing AB 2051, which
references services for "battered women" 31 times yet never once mentions "male
victims," "men," or even simply “victims.” While California funds over 100
domestic violence shelters for women, there are only two facilities in the state
which even accept male victims, and both of them are in remote areas.
Recently Kuehl and the California Senate Judiciary Committee took the state’s
DV policies to a new level of absurdity by passing a law to address the issue of
domestic violence and…pets!
Kuehl’s SB 353 amends Section 6320 of the Family Code so that women claiming
domestic abuse can more easily gain custody of the family’s pets. The bill also
allows women to obtain restraining orders which prevent alleged abusers from
having contact with their pets.
While legislators focus on protecting dogs, cats, rabbits and hamsters from
being exposed to domestic violence, they’ve failed to offer any services to men.
Yet in domestic battles women often employ the element of surprise and weapons
to compensate for men's greater strength.
The National Institute of Mental Health funded and oversaw two of the largest
studies of domestic violence ever conducted, both of which found equal rates of
abuse between husbands and wives. Professor Martin S. Fiebert of California
State University, Long Beach maintains an online bibliography summarizing nearly
200 academic studies that conclude that women are as physically aggressive in
their intimate relationships as men. An analysis of 552 domestic violence
studies published in the Psychological Bulletin found that 38 percent of the
physical injuries in heterosexual domestic assaults are suffered by men.
California’s exclusionary DV policies have aroused considerable opposition
from domestic violence researchers and treatment providers. Last May, more than
50 of these authorities signed a letter to the Legislature opposing AB 2051.
They stated:
“The data is without question–domestic violence affects both men and women.
The politicization of this issue must stop and services must be provided to all
children and their parent victims.”
SB 353 also aggravates the California restraining order problem. The bill
creates a new crime—violating a restraining order for a pet!
According to the Attorney General's office, there are a quarter of a million
domestic violence-related restraining orders currently active in California--one
for every 50 adult males in the state. While restraining orders can be a useful
tool to help protect battered women, they are often misused. The Family Law
News, the official publication of the State Bar of California Family Law
Section, recently explained:
"Protective orders are increasingly being used in family law cases to help
one side jockey for an advantage in child custody…[the orders are] almost
routinely issued by the court in family law proceedings even when there is
relatively meager evidence and usually without notice to the restrained person.”
These orders often do not even involve an allegation of violence--according
to the Judicial Council of California, the "abuse" needed to get a restraining
order can be "spoken" or "written."
Restraining orders boot men out of their homes, cut them off from their
children and forbid them many routine behaviors. Men are being arrested for
violating their orders by such acts as: returning their children’s phone calls;
going to their children’s school or athletic events; sending their kids birthday
cards; or accidentally running into them at the park or the mall. Under SB 353,
men will be arrested if they have contact with their dogs or cats!
California has a serious problem in the way it handles domestic violence.
Instead of addressing these issues, the Senate Judiciary Committee passed SB
353. Were the Senators able to keep a straight face as they voted?
This article appeared in the Long Beach Press-Telegram
(4/21/07).
Mike
McCormick is the Executive Director of the American Coalition for Fathers and
Children, the world’s largest shared parenting organization.
Their
website
is
www.acfc.org.
Glenn
Sacks' columns on men's and fathers' issues have appeared in dozens of America's
largest newspapers. Glenn can be reached via his website at
www.GlennSacks.com or
via email at Glenn@GlennSacks.com.
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